Purpose of Agitation Vessel
Purpose of Agitation Vessel
Purpose of Agitation Vessel
In the chemical and other processing industries, many operations are dependent to a great extent
on effective agitation and mixing of fluids. Generally, agitation refers to forcing a fluid by
mechanical means to flow in a circulatory or other pattern inside a vessel. Mixing usually implies
the taking of two or more separate phases, such as a fluid and a powdered solid or two fluids, and
causing them to be randomly distributed through one another.
There are a number of purposes for agitating fluids, some of which are briefly summarized:
3. Dispersing a gas in a liquid as fine bubbles, such as oxygen from air in a suspension of
microorganisms for fermentation or for the activated sludge process in waste treatment.
Prevention of swirling
Generally, three methods are used to prevent the formation of swirls and vortices:
putting the agitator eccentric to the vessel, using a side entrance to the vessel, and putting baffles
along the vessel wall. Figure 6.4 shows these three methods of prevention. The left side of Figure
6.4a shows the agitator to the right of the vessel center and in an inclined position; the right side
shows the agitator to the left and in a vertical position. Both locations are no longer concentric
with the vessel but eccentric to it, so the circumferential path needed to form the swirl would no
longer exist, thus avoiding the formation of both the swirl and the vortex.
Figure 1 is an example of a side-entering configuration. It should be clear that swirls and
vortices would also be avoided in this kind of configuration. Figure 6.4c shows the agitator
mounted at the center of the vessel with four baffles installed on the vessel wall. The swirl may
initially form close to the center. As this swirl
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Propagates towards the wall its outer rim will be broken by the baffles however preventing its eventual
formation
In its most general sense, the process of mixing is concerned with all combinations of phases, of
which the most frequently occurring are
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Interaction of three phases—gases, liquids, and solids—may also occur, as in the hydrogenation
of a vegetable oil in the presence of a suspended solid nickel catalyst in a hydrogen-sparged,
mechanically agitated reactor.
Three of the processes involving liquids—numbers 2, 5, and 6 in the preceding list—employ the
same equipment; namely, tanks in which the liquid is circulated and subjected to a desired level
of shear. Mixing involving liquids has been most extensively studied and is most important in
practice; thus, fluid mixing will be given most coverage here. Many mixing process results can
be designed a priori, by using the mixing literature without resorting to experimental studies.
These include agitator power requirements, heat transfer, liquid-liquid blending, solids
suspension, mass transfer to suspended particles, and many solid-solid applications. However,
many other applications invariably involve experimental work followed by scale-up. These
include liquid-liquid, gas-liquid, and fast competitive chemical reactions. Scale-up is addressed
here, and, as we cover scaleup, the reader will discover that an understanding of mixing
fundamentals is essential to the proper handling of scale-up.
Mixing of liquids:
Mixing of liquids occurs frequently in process engineering. The nature of liquids to blend
determines the equipment used. Single-phase blending tends to involve low-shear, high-flow
mixers to cause liquid engulfment, while multi-phase mixing generally requires the use of high-
shear, low-flow mixers to create droplets of one liquid in laminar, turbulent or transitional flow
regimes, depending on the Reynolds number of the flow. Turbulent or transitional mixing is
frequently conducted with turbines or impellers; laminar mixing is conducted with helical ribbon
or anchor mixers.[2]
Single-phase blending
Mixing of liquids that are miscible or at least soluble in each other occurs frequently in process
engineering (and in everyday life). An everyday example would be the addition of milk or cream to tea
or coffee. Since both liquids are water-based, they dissolve easily in one another. The momentum of the
liquid being added is sometimes enough to cause enough turbulence to mix the two, since the viscosity
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of both liquids is relatively low. If necessary, a spoon or paddle could be used to complete the mixing
process. Blending in a more viscous liquid, such as honey, requires more mixing power per unit volume
to achieve the same homogeneity in the same amount of time.
Agitator vessel
Agitator vessels represent equipment often used in process engineering. They are used in the
manufacture of chemical compounds, pharmaceuticals, personal care products and foods. The
functions of this apparatus range from the creation of a homogenous mixture via the manufacture
to emulsions and suspensions, right up to heating, cooling and evaporating. They can be used for
the absorption of gases in liquids, as reactors for chemical syntheses and for aerobic
fermentation. Several basic operations occur simultaneously in an agitator vessel, including the
important function of energy transmission for heat and material transfer.
We manufacture reactors for chemical reaction processes which feature diverse constructions
and material combinations according to the application conditions.
References:
[1] Ullmann, Fritz (2005). Ullmann's Chemical Engineering and Plant Design, Volumes 1–2. John
Wiley & Sons. http://app.knovel.com/hotlink/toc/id:kpUCEPDV02/ullmanns-chemical-
engineering
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[2] "Various Mixing Experiments". Bakker.org. 10 April 1998. Archived from the original on 26 June
2017. Retrieved 23 June 2017.
[3] "Batch and continuous solids mixing comparison - Powder Mixing" .
[4] "Powder Mixing - Design - problem solving - Ribbon blender, Paddle mixer, Drum blender,
Froude Number - PowderProcess.net". www.powderprocess.net. Archived from the original on
28 September 2017. Retrieved 26 April 2018.
[5] "Stirred Vessels". Bakker.org. 10 April 1998. Archived from the original on 14 August 2017.
Retrieved 23 June 2017.
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